May 24th, '10, 00:36
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Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by auhckw » May 24th, '10, 00:36

Hello, I'm new here and also very new to tea.

I bought these last week and have yet to use it. Thinking to use it soon. My first teapot and cups.

I read that 1 pot = 1 kind of tea.

Example, Let's say I use my pot for green tea, does it mean in general all kinds of green tea for that 1 pot, or specific to one kind of green tea such as Gyokuro, etc?

Here are some spam photos :)

Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

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May 24th, '10, 00:37
Posts: 1634
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by auhckw » May 24th, '10, 00:37

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May 24th, '10, 00:37
Posts: 1634
Joined: May 24th, '10, 00:30
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by auhckw » May 24th, '10, 00:37

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May 24th, '10, 00:37
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by auhckw » May 24th, '10, 00:37

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May 24th, '10, 00:38
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by auhckw » May 24th, '10, 00:38

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May 24th, '10, 00:39
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by auhckw » May 24th, '10, 00:39

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May 24th, '10, 00:56
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by Chip » May 24th, '10, 00:56

Wow, impressive collection for a newbie.

Generally for porous clay teapots, it is best not to mix use the pot too much.

Welcome to the forum. Introduce yourself under Introductions!

May 24th, '10, 06:05
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by auhckw » May 24th, '10, 06:05

Chip wrote:Wow, impressive collection for a newbie.

Generally for porous clay teapots, it is best not to mix use the pot too much.

Welcome to the forum. Introduce yourself under Introductions!
Ok, I will only use the Banko to do the Gyokuro.

Where all other teas will use this glassware. Read that glass = neutral.

Just went and bought this during lunch today.

Heat-Resistant Glassware (FH-234)

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May 24th, '10, 08:48
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by Tead Off » May 24th, '10, 08:48

Chip wrote:Wow, impressive collection for a newbie.

Generally for porous clay teapots, it is best not to mix use the pot too much.

Welcome to the forum. Introduce yourself under Introductions!
I don't think the Banko teapot is particularly porous. Or, maybe you were just saying this in general. Banko is high fired and thin, at least this maker's kyusu are. I own 1 Tachi Masaki kyusu and 3 other Banko pots. All thin. I have used it for different teas like sencha and other greens and also for Puerh. The teapot didn't seem to mind. :wink:

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May 24th, '10, 09:24
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by Chip » May 24th, '10, 09:24

It is more porous than say a glazed kyusu is what I am saying. It will absorb flavors and aromas of teas over time.

I had a Tokoname pot years ago, yeah different than Banko, but I used if for everything. Over time every tea would have a similar sweet taste which was nice, but I also annoyed me. I want differentiation.

So, if you use one Banko pot for everything for several years, you may experience a similar reaction.

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May 24th, '10, 10:28
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by Tead Off » May 24th, '10, 10:28

Chip wrote:It is more porous than say a glazed kyusu is what I am saying. It will absorb flavors and aromas of teas over time.

I had a Tokoname pot years ago, yeah different than Banko, but I used if for everything. Over time every tea would have a similar sweet taste which was nice, but I also annoyed me. I want differentiation.

So, if you use one Banko pot for everything for several years, you may experience a similar reaction.
Maybe the terminology is not quite right. Porous to me means to absorb. I don't think these pots absorb flavors as some people believe. But, they definitely build up a stain or residue in the interior that over time can affect the flavor of different teas.

Another big difference between glazed and unglazed pots is the use of soap or rubbing to clean them. With porcelain, if you don't clean them well, they build up the same kind of stain that an unglazed banko builds up. But, with unglazed, this effect is desirable. I think it's more superficial than most think but aesthetically, a stained porcelain pot or gaiwan is not pretty.

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May 24th, '10, 11:49
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by Victoria » May 24th, '10, 11:49

Beautiful Banko set auhckw!
I like the glass set up too.
Congratulations and welcome!

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May 24th, '10, 12:21
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Re: Tachi Masaki - Banko Yaki (Japan Purple Clay)

by Oni » May 24th, '10, 12:21

Congratulations! You have a very fine teaware, a true piece of art, I immediately checked my banko teaware, and all I can say that Tachi Masaki has all my respect, the teaware that he makes is perfect in every way, I haven`t seen such a perfect lid fit on any teaware I had, plus it makes great tea. I would use it for sencha though, for gyokuro master Jitsuzan`s banko houhins are much better, because of the size, you really don`t need a large 250 ml kyusu for that job, generally gyokuro is consumed in small quantity so a teaware should max hold 150 ml for this pourpous, Tachi masaki also makes mame-kyusu (smal kyusu) at 150 ml.

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